Synopsis
Part 1: Fundamental and legal questions
1. Legal fundamentalism: is data protection really a fundamental right?
Bart Van der Sloot
2. Is there a Right to Offline Alternatives in a Digital World?
Murat Karaboga, Tobias Matzner, Hannah Obersteller and Carsten Ochs
3. What is New with the Internet of Things in Privacy and Data Protection? Four Legal Challenges
Ugo Pagallo, Massimo Durante and Shara Monteleone
Part 2: Concepts and tools
4. Towards a code of Conduct on privacy for mHealth to foster trust among users of mobile health applications
Eugenio Mantovani, Joan Antokol, Sjaak Nouwt, Marian Hoekstra, Nico Schutte, Pēteris Zilgalvis, Juan-Pedro Castro and Claudia Prettner
5. Minimum Harm by Design. Reworking Privacy by Design to mitigate the risks of surveillance
Elisa Orru
6. A purpose-based taxonomy for better governance of personal data in the Internet of Things era: the example of wellness data
Claire Levallois-Barth and Hugo Zylberberg
7. A Privacy Engineering Framework for the Internet of Things
Antonio Kung, Frank Kargl, Santiago Suppan, Jorge Cuellar, Henrich C. Pöhls, Adam Kapovits, Nicolas Notario and Yod Samuel Martin
Part 3: Case studies
8. Dangers from Within? Looking Inwards at the Role of Maladministration as the Leading Cause of Health Data Breaches in the UK
Leslie Stevens, Christine Dobbs, Kerina Jones and Graeme Laurie
9. On the road to privacy- and data protection-friendly security technologies in the workplace - A case-study of the MUSES Risk and Trust Analysis Engine
Yung Shin Van Der Sype, Jonathan Guislain, Seigneur Jean-Marc and Xavier Titi
10. A Study on Corporate Compliance with Transparency Requirements of Data Protection Law
Christoph Bier, Simon Kömpf and Jürgen Beyerer
Part 4: closing
11.Closing remarks: 9th International Computers, Privacy and Data Protection Conference
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